News

How often do we really examine curatorial contributions – not simply to an exhibition, but to the care and display of ...
Illness meant that we missed the window to publish our usual pick of the week’s arts, design, film and music events from ...
The stone simply indicates where his remains are buried. What about his life, identity, choices? His family, his legacy?
As interdisciplinary as its other programmes, Photography MA students are experimenting with everything from analogue to neuroscience, fabrication and sculpture. Laura Robertson talks to their ...
Psychogeography is more than the psychological effects of the urban environment, argues Maisie Ridgway. Here, she explains why the movement has become a political statement, a seizure of power and a ...
“From the situatedness of the city through to the mediated experience of the symbolic plane.” Anthony Ellis takes a look, via various Liverpool streets and eateries, at the weaving together of ...
Listen. What can you hear? All quiet? Or is there a noise? “Sounds are overlaid with whispering voices which count in Polish, Czech, Slovak, German, Slovenian and Italian” She is an outsider, ...
“A feeling, a period, a mood.” Mike Pinnington on Veronica Watson, whose portraits – celebrated in new publication All Together Now – currently adorn the Bluecoat’s upstairs gallery… What does it mean ...
Arts and culture organisations have been anxiously waiting for their fates to be revealed this morning, as Arts Council England finally announce who gets the 2023-26 round of ‘National Portfolio ...
It was difficult and complicated, but you told us what it feels like to be working class and work in the arts. Last year, after much umming and ahing, hand wringing, and conversation amongst ourselves ...
“Opportunities to engage with names other than the movement’s usual suspects are all too rare.” Mike Pinnington on a close encounter with the geometric abstraction of Ding Yi… When we think about ...